City
Epaper

India-American takes office as head of top US medical research body

By IANS | Updated: April 1, 2025 21:31 IST

Washington, April 1 Jayanta 'Jay' Bhattacharya on Tuesday took over as the 18th Director of the US National ...

Open in App

Washington, April 1 Jayanta 'Jay' Bhattacharya on Tuesday took over as the 18th Director of the US National Institutes of Health, which is the country’s premier medical research agency.

Dr Bhattacharya is one of the senior-most Indian-Americans in the Donald Trump administration. He was nominated to the position in November and was confirmed by the US Senate on March 25. The top Indian-American in this administration is Second Lady Usha Vance.

He will "play an instrumental role in shaping the agency’s activities and outlook and ensuring they align with the President’s Make America Healthy Again agenda", the NIH said.

"Under Dr Bhattacharya’s leadership, NIH will restore its commitment to gold-standard science," Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr, said. "I'm excited to work with Dr. Bhattacharya to ensure NIH research aligns with our Administration’s priorities - especially tackling the chronic disease epidemic and helping to Make America Healthy Again."

Dr Bhattacharya said: "Chronic diseases such as cancer, heart disease, diabetes and obesity continue to cause poor health outcomes in every community across the United States. Novel biomedical discoveries that enhance health and lengthen life are more vital than ever to our country’s future."

"As NIH Director, I will build on the agency’s long and illustrious history of supporting breakthroughs in biology and medicine by fostering gold-standard research and innovation to address the chronic disease crisis."

Born in Kolkata, he earned BA and MA degrees in economics at Stanford University and then went on to earn a doctorate in medicine and a PhD in economics from the same university.

Dr Bhattacharya caught national attention in the aftermath of the Covid-19 outbreak when he publicly opposed the lockdowns and the mask mandate.”We have grave concerns," Bhattacharya and his two co-authors wrote in a widely cited paper titled the “Great Barrington Declaration". "We have grave concerns about the damaging physical and mental health impacts of the prevailing Covid-19 policies."

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalUK MP condemns racist attack on Sikh woman in Oldbury

International9 held as London erupts in immigration, counter immigration rallies

AurangabadOver 20 of 39 drug peddlers face serious charges; MRs, traders caught again

Other SportsAsia Cup: Nissanka, Mishara power Sri Lanka to dominant win over Bangladesh

NationalArmy showcases tactical excellence in ‘Exercise Dibang Shakti’ in Arunachal

Health Realted Stories

HealthSmartwatch, fitness tracker may help detect abnormalities in pregnancy

HealthStudy claims artificial sweeteners can lead to faster cognitive decline

HealthKerala to host national workshop to strengthen digital solutions in Ayush sector

HealthSocial media driving negative opinion on contraceptive pills among women: Study

LifestyleToo Much Salt Is Not Just a Taste Problem It Could Signal Deeper Health Issues